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Comparison of three methods of forecasting 24-hour tropical cyclone movement in the Western Australian region
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Comparison of three methods of forecasting 24-hour tropical cyclone movement in the Western Australian region

J. Hopwood and W.D. Scott
Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia, Vol.75, pp.3-7
1992
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Abstract

Three methods of forecasting tropical cyclone tracks in the Western Australia region are discussed. One is a version of Neumann's CUPER adapted for the region and referred to as CPLR, another is a method developed in Western Australia which uses the low-level relative vorticity field in the environment of the cyclone as a predictor, and the last is pure persistence. The three methods were used to produce 214 triplets of forecasts from best-track data for 13 cyclones and the results compared. The Wilcoxon test was used to test the significance of differences between forecasts for various subsets of cyclones. The results suggest that (a) the performances of the first two methods match that of persistence overall, and are superior when the error in the persistence forecast is greater than the mean error or when the cyclones are recurving, and (b) the second method matches CPLR overall and surpasses it with some categories of cyclones.

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